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ues of the shining sea. Be grateful, my heart, for everyman's gold; By road-way and river and hill unfold Sun-coloured blossoms that never are sold. For the little joys sometimes say a grace; The scent of a rose, the frost's fairy lace, Or the sound of the rain in a quiet place. Be glad of what cannot be bought or beguiled; The trust of the tameless, the fearless, the wild, The song of a bird and the faith of a child. For prairie and mountain, windswept and high, For betiding beauty of earth and sky-- Say a benediction e'er you pass by. Give thanks, my soul, for the things that are free! The joy of life and the spring's ecstasy, The dreams that have been and the dreams that will be. DON CUPID Oh! little pink and white god of love, With your tender smiling mouth, And eyes as blue as the blue above, Afar in the sunny south. No army e'er laid so many low Or wounded so many hearts, No mighty gunner e'er wrought such woe As you with your feathered darts. HEAVEN Not with the haloed saints would Heaven be For such as I; Who have not reached to their serenity So sweet and high. Not with the martyrs washed by holy flame Could I find place, For they are victors who through glory came To see God's face. Not with the perfect souls that enter there Could mine abide, For clouded eyes from eyes all cloudless fair 'Twere best to hide. And not for me the wondrous streets of gold Or crystal sea-- I only know the brown earth, worn and old, Where sinners be. Unless I found those who to me belong, My dear and own, I, in the vastness of that shining throng, Would be alone. God guide us to some sun-blessed little star, We ask not where, Nor whether it be near or it be far, So Love is there. SIR HENRY IRVING "Thou trumpet made for Shakespeare's lips to blow!" No more for thee the music and the lights, Thy magic may no more win smile nor frown; For thee, 0 dear interpreter of dreams, The curtain hath rung down. No more the sea of faces, turned to thine, Swayed by impassioned word and breathless pause; No more the triumph of thine art--no more The thunder of applause. No more for thee the maddening, mystic bells, The haunting horror--and the falling snow; No more of Shylock's fury, and no more The Prince of Denmark's woe. Not once again the fret of heart and soul, The loneliness and passion of King Lear; No
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